About the Artist

Graham Bennett is probably best known in New Zealand for two very high profile sculptures – Reasons for Voyaging, the soaring seven-pillar installation outside the Christchurch Art Gallery in Montreal St, and the Tribute to Firefighters he was asked to create in Christchurch from steel girders, sent to him from the World Trade Center ruins in New York.
He featured as the cover story of the 2014 Winter edition of World Sculpture News, in an article focused particularly on the 10-year Survey Exhibition of his work, at The Suter Public Art Gallery in Nelson, NZ. This followed on from a residency in Seoul, South Korea, in which he created a towering outdoor sculpture Tipping Point now on permanent display. He also works in miniature, such as the meticulously worked Wait Watcher series, and in jewellery based on his sculptures, effectively sculpture for the body.
Bennett’s sculpture is an evolution of ideas and philosophies based on concepts of sustainability, and of voyaging, past present and future, connection between islands in the Pacific, connections between the primordial land and man’s temporary imposition on it, with our structures imposed on or cutting into the land, and particularly of connections and differences between cultures across the world.
He considers questions of identity, and our sense of place. His work often features lines of latitude and longitude, the phases of the moon and passages of planets across the Earth, as followed by explorers through the Pacific, such as the Transit of Venus.
He uses impermanent man-made materials – like steel – against natural materials like rock and wood, to express those ideas. He was born in Nelson, the geographic centre of New Zealand, near the natural rock formation the Boulder Bank, and this has influenced his work. Faultlines and geothermal lines project out from New Zealand to places across the Pacific, with the concept that the waters that lap our shores, also break on their coast, and thus connect us.

Recent Works

A recurring motif is based on the ‘orange peel segment’ flattened map of the world. Each segment is also the shape of a canoe or vessel; when standing vertically his pieces sometimes further suggest a human element or vertebrae. Recent works bring together four of those segments to form a closed pod shape, reaching upwards and out.

Graham Bennett completes detailed studies on paper for each of his sculptures, but these are not so much plans for sculpture as paintings conveying the feeling as much as the dimension and scale of the intended works.

Lately his work focuses on questions of balance in our impact on the environment, and the idea we are moving dangerously close to the ‘tipping point’ of no return or remediation. A major commission in Seoul, South Korea, featured a human figure he calls the invisible man, arms outstretched, turning atop a five-metre pole structure. The figure casts a shadow below, suggestive of our impact on the environment. Watching the shadow move across the grid of paving stones, he developed ideas for a new series ‘Heavy Shadows’, laser cut in corten steel, the figure seemingly caught in a net of his own making or perhaps pulled in different directions. A small series of beautiful Echo wall works, focus as much or more on the figure’s shadow than the solid work itself.

After a major survey show of the last 10 years of Bennett’s work at the Suter Gallery, in Nelson, the artist has released several of the works in that exhibition for sale, from his personal collection.

He has also recently agreed to exhibit small jewellery pieces or ‘sculpture for the body’ based on his larger works. These dramatic brooches and neckpieces range in price from $500 to $850. The 15 miniature sculptures from the Wait Watcher series, featuring the ‘invisible man’ above the tipping point clock, are now available individually at $1000 each, or the whole work for $15,000. Each one represents one of the final 15 minutes before we reach the ‘tipping point’ in our balance with the environment.

Hard to Swallow – a plea for the whales

In 2012 The Diversion and Graham Bennett staged an exhibition entitled ‘Hard to Swallow’ with 267 small sculptures laser cut from tin plated steel, each one representing a whale killed in the Southern Ocean ‘harvest’ of 2011-2012. The intended kill of 990 was cut short by the Sea Shepherd protests and by storms. With heavy irony, Bennett used text and motifs from a real whale meat tin within the composition, including the base text saying ‘Be Careful not to cut your hand on the tin when opening’. The laser cut sculptures cast a shadow on the wall, our impact on the whales’ environment.

Each work is individually numbered and signed, and priced at just $267 + GST (the number of the whales killed); making them accessibly priced to encourage a kind of viral marketing of the idea, with each new owner telling the story to those who view their work. A donation goes to the National Whale Centre on London Quay in Picton – opposite The Diversion Gallery.

More About the Artist

Born in Nelson, Graham Bennett graduated from the Canterbury School of Fine Arts in 1970. He has received numerous major NZ Arts awards including the Fellowship in Visual Arts from the NZ Arts Council in 1995 and the Asia 200 Foundation Grant the same year and in 1999. He was Principal Lecturer in the School of Art and Design at Christchurch Polytechnic for several years but has for some years been a full time artist with increasing demand for his work nationally and internationally.

His work is included in several major outdoor private and public sculpture parks, including Gibbs Farm, Brick Bay, Connell’s Bay, and Sculpture on the Gulf. He has participated in major sculpture events here and overseas. He has exhibited a dozen times in Japan, including two international exhibitions, and has a work in the New Zealand embassy in Tokyo. Some of the works we have available were exhibited in Hong Kong in 2009.

He has now three times featured as the cover story in World Sculpture News, and his story is one of being a New Zealander and of identity in the context of a vast world, and finding a balance between our use of resources and sustainability of the environment.

Please contact us to confirm current prices: most prices are posted at the time of exhibition, and may be revised as the artists' values increase.